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21-30 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년)
글쓴이 : 써니 날짜 : 2016-09-25 (일) 04:20 조회 : 2727

Bloomberg 50 Most Influential

21-30 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년)


50 John Oliver 
49 Larry Summers 
48 Jim Coulter 
47 Mary Barra 
46 Blythe Masters 
45 Ken Moelis 
44 Raj Chetty 
43 Wang Jianlin 
42 Prince Mohammed bin Salman 
41 Jorge Paulo Lemann 
40 Travis Kalanick 
39 Mark Zuckerberg 
38 Ruth Porat 
37 Margrethe Vestager 
36 Robert Gordon 
35 Marc Benioff 
34 Lael Brainard 
33 Michael Pettis 
32 Paul Singer 
31 Stephen Schwarzman 
30 Vladimir Putin 
29 Joseph Stiglitz 
28 Mark Carney 
27 Paul Taubman 
26 Charles Scharf 
25 Masayoshi Son 
24 Mary Erdoes 
23 John Stumpf 
22 Jeffrey Gundlach 
21 Sergio Ermotti 
20 Carl Icahn 
19 Loretta Lynch 
18 Jay Y. Lee 
17 Jack Ma 
16 Larry Fink 
15 Lloyd Blankfein 
14 Zhou Xiaochuan 
13 Jamie Dimon 
12 Bill McNabb 
11 Elon Musk 
10 Sérgio Moro 
9 Warren Buffett 
8 Janet Yellen 
7 Mario Draghi 
6 Angela Merkel 
5 Jeff Bezos 
4 Xi Jinping 
2 Hillary Clinton 
2 Donald Trump 
1 Theresa May 

써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:30
#21

Sergio Ermotti
CEO, UBS

11 May 1960 (age 56)



In the race to reinvent Swiss banking, Ermotti has a head start. He moved quickly after he was given the top job in late 2011, stressing wealth management, shrinking investment banking, and cutting costs. That paid off for a few years, though the earnings rebound lost momentum in 2015. UBS has dramatically outperformed rival Credit Suisse during Ermotti’s tenure, but nothing’s easy in European banking. Among the concerns: Wealthy clients from developing countries are pulling their money, fearing increased scrutiny from tax authorities.


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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 07:23

UBS AG is a Swiss global financial services company, incorporated in theCanton of Zurich,[3] and co-headquartered in Zurich and Basel.[4] The company provides wealth managementasset management, and investment banking services for private, corporate, and institutional clients worldwide, and is generally considered to be a bulge bracket bank. In Switzerland, these services are also offered to retail clients.[5] The name UBS was originally an abbreviation for the Union Bank of Switzerland, but it ceased to be a representational abbreviation after the bank's merger with Swiss Bank Corporation in 1998.[6] The company traces its origins to 1856, when the earliest of its predecessor banks was founded.[6]

UBS is considered the world's largest manager of private wealth assets, with over CHF 2.2 trillion in invested assets,[7] and remains a leading provider ofretail banking and commercial banking services in Switzerland. Its assets under management (AuM) amounted in 2014 to US$1,966.9 billion, representing a 15.4% increase in AuM compared to the equivalent data of 2013.[8] It is the biggest bank in Switzerland, operating in more than 50 countries with about 60,000 employees around the world, as of 2014.[9]

In comparison to other European banks, UBS suffered among the largest losses during the subprime mortgage crisis, and it was required to raise large amounts of outside capital. The bank received a US$9.7 billion capitalinjection in 2007 from the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation(currently GIC Private Limited effective from July 2013), which remains one of the bank's largest shareholders.[10] UBS also received capital from the Swiss government, further complemented by a series of equity offerings in 2007, 2008, and 2009.



UBS Group AG
Aktiengesellschaft (AG)
Public company
Traded asSIXUBSG SIXUBSN
NYSEUBS
IndustryBankingFinancial services
Predecessor

Union Bank of Switzerlandand Swiss Bank Corporationmerged in 1998;

PaineWebber merged in 2000
Founded1862; 154 years ago
HeadquartersZürich
Basel
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Axel A. Weber (Chairman)
Sergio Ermotti (CEO)
ProductsInvestment Banking
Investment Management
Wealth Management
Private Banking
Corporate Banking
Private Equity
Finance and Insurance
Consumer Banking
Mortgages
Credit Cards
Increase CHF 30.605 billion (2015)[1][2]
Total assetsDecrease CHF 943 billion (2015)[2]
Total equityIncrease CHF 57.308 billion (2015)[2]
Number of employees
Decrease 60,099 (2015)[2]
Capital ratio14.5% (2015) [2]
WebsiteUBS.com


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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:31
#22

Jeffrey Gundlach
Founder and CEO, DoubleLine Capital

Picture of Jeffrey Gundlach
October 30, 1959 (age 56)



Gundlach’s Los Angeles-based investment firm passed $100 billion in assets in June. His fearless prognostications and record of prescient calls make him influential beyond DoubleLine’s size. In January he forecast that gold would reach $1,400 this year and that oil would plateau below $50. He also predicts a President Donald Trump. Gundlach warns that bad times are coming, assets are overpriced, and interest rates have hit bottom. Bet against him at your peril.


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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 07:32

Firm Overview

DoubleLine is an investment management firm and registered investment advisor.

  • Headquartered in downtown Los Angeles
  • DoubleLine Assets Under Management (AUM) as of June 1, 2016 over $100 billion

Accolades

  • The DoubleLine team was recognized with Institutional Investors “U.S. Fixed Income—Mortgage Backed Securities” award in 2013 and 20141
  • Named Risk Magazine’s “Asset Manager of the Year”2 in 2014
  • Awarded “Bond Manager of the Year” by Foundations & Endowments Money Management3

Jeffrey Gundlach’s Accolades

  • Named one of Forbes “Most Powerful People” in 20144
  • Named Institutional Investor’s “Money Manager of the Year”1 in 2013
  • Named to Bloomberg Markets’ magazine “50 Most Influential”5 in 2012
  • Named to Fortune Magazine’s Investor’s Guide “Mutual Fund All‐Stars”6 in 2011
  • Lead portfolio manager, was a nominee for Morningstar’s “Fixed Income Manager of the Decade”8 in 2009
  1. Includes Bank Loan and other Floating Rate securities.
  2. DoubleLine Equity LP is the registered investment advisor for all Equities strategies, excluding Shiller Enhanced CAPE©
  3. DoubleLine Commodity LP is the registered advisor for all Commodity strategies.
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:32
#23

John Stumpf
CEO, Wells Fargo

September 15, 1953 (age 63)

Wells Fargo has distinguished itself mostly by what it doesn’t do. Stumpf’s bank is simpler than its East Coast rivals, with less investment banking and trading and, until recently, less of a propensity to run afoul of regulators. Now Stumpf faces the biggest scandal of his career after Wells Fargo paid $185 million to settle complaints that employees opened accounts customers didn’t know about. He’s stumbled as he’s addressed the scandal, initially blaming low-level employees—5,300 have been fired for improper conduct. The bank’s shares have been so battered that Wells recently lost the title of world’s most valuable bank. 


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써니 2016-09-26 (월) 07:53

Wells Fargo & Company is an American international banking and financial services holding company headquartered in San FranciscoCalifornia, with "hubquarters" throughout the country.[5] It is the world's second largest bank by market capitalization[6] and the third largest bank in the U.S. by assets.[7]In July 2015, Wells Fargo became the world's largest bank by market capitalization, edging past ICBC,[7] before slipping behind JP Morgan Chasein September 2016, in the wake of a scandal involving the alleged creation of over a million fake bank accounts by thousands of Wells Fargo employees.[6] Wells Fargo surpassed Citigroup Inc. to become the third-largest U.S. bank by assets at the end of 2015. Wells Fargo is the second largest bank in deposits, home mortgage servicing, and debit cards. The firm's primary U.S. operating subsidiary is national bank Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., which designates its main office as Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

In 2016, Wells Fargo ranked 7th on the Forbes Magazine Global 2000 list of largest public companies in the world[8] and ranked 27th on the Fortune 500list of largest companies in the United States.[9] In 2015, the company was ranked the 22nd most admired company in the world, and the 7th most respected company in the world.[8]

As of October 2015, the company had a credit rating of AA−.[10] However, for a brief period in 2007, the company was the only AAA-rated bank.[11]

Wells Fargo in its present form is a result of a merger between San Francisco–based Wells Fargo & Company and Minneapolis-based Norwest Corporation in 1998 and the subsequent 2008 acquisition of Charlotte-based Wachovia. Following the mergers, the company transferred its headquarters to Wells Fargo's headquarters in San Francisco and merged its operating subsidiary with Wells Fargo's operating subsidiary in Sioux Falls.

Along with JPMorgan ChaseBank of America, and Citigroup, Wells Fargo is one of the "Big Four Banks" of the United States.[12] As of December 31, 2015, it had 8,700 retail branches and 13,000 automated teller machines.[8]The company operates across 35 countries and has over 70 million customers globally.[8]

In February 2014, Wells Fargo was named the world's most valuable bank brand for the second year running[13] in The Banker and Brand Financestudy of the top 500 banking brands.[14]



Wells Fargo & Company
Public company
Traded asNYSEWFC
S&P 500 Component
IndustryBankingFinancial services
PredecessorsCrocker National Bank
First Interstate Bancorp
Bank of North America
First Security Corporation
Norwest Corporation
Wachovia
FoundedMarch 18, 1852; 164 years ago
New York CityNew York,United States[1]
FounderHenry Wells
William Fargo
HeadquartersSan Francisco, California,United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
John G. Stumpf
(Chairman & CEO)[2]
ProductsConsumer banking
Corporate banking
Credit cards
Financial services
Foreign currency exchange
Investment banking
Mortgage loans
Private banking
Private equity
Wealth management
RevenueIncrease US$86.057 billion (2015)[1]
Decrease US$33.84 billion (2015)[1]
ProfitDecrease US$22.894 billion (2015)[1]
Total assetsIncrease US$1.849 trillion (2016)[3]
Total equityIncrease US$193.891 billion (2015)[1]
OwnersBerkshire Hathaway: 9.93%
Vanguard Group: 5.39%
State Street: 3.82%[4]
Number of employees
265,200 (2015)[1]
DivisionsWells Fargo Rail
SloganTogether we'll go far.
WebsiteWellsFargo.com





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써니 2016-09-26 (월) 07:57

John Stumpf's Elizabethan Drama

By Michael P. Regan


Sep 23, 2016 3:17 PM EDT

The two most important financial news stories of the week shared a strange common theme: older people getting hurt while playing with their grandkids. 

If only I could find a third example, I could write a trend piece warning all of America's grandparents of the grave personal risk they face when interacting with grandkids! 

But alas, only two.

The first was John Stumpf, chairman and chief executive of Wells Fargo and No. 23 onBloomberg's latest 50 Most Influential list. He raised a bandaged right hand when he was sworn in to testify before the Senate Banking Committee about the fake-account scandalrocking his bank.  

While it looked suspiciously like an injury a CEO suffers by punching, say, a wall -- or a direct report -- media including the Charlotte Observer were quick to report the official story: He hurt it while playing with his grandkids. 

Next up was septuagenarian hedge-fund manager Leon Cooperman, whose reputation and legacy are heavily bandaged after purchasing some Atlas Pipeline Partners securities on behalf of a grandkid (and other investors) in what the Securities and Exchange Commission is portraying as a blatant case of insider-trading. 

Cooperman defended himself with a letter to investors and a conference call, saying the trades were simply part of his longstanding investing strategy, which also includesgetting close to the executives of companies he invests in. 

Surprisingly, he opened the conference call by talking about an older man who slept with an 18-year-old woman, which made me worry the phone numbers had gotten mixed up and this was actually Anthony Weiner on the line. But it really was Cooperman with the old joke about an elderly man who confesses his exploits to a priest. But you're Jewish, the priest says, why are you telling me? Responds the old man: I'm telling everyone!   

Obviously, this is questionable taste in jokes, but at least his timing was better than Siri's. Still, the joke highlights a commonality between Cooperman's approaches to both humor and investing: techniques successful and acceptable in a bygone era are now way more risky. 

But if you ask who won the business news this week, it was obviously Senator Elizabeth Warren, whose takedown of Stumpf was the most talked-about righteous rant since Jon Stewart retired.

You have to respect her style -- simple yes-or-no questions that allow her maximum microphone share in the allotted time, the answers to which most everyone watching already knows but which still make the subject squirm. Have you resigned? Have you given back any of the millions you earned while this scam was going on? Have you fired any top executives?  


wells-fargo



Perhaps Warren's tongue-lashing is the only punishment Stumpf will end up facing, but that's not to say he got off easy.    

If Warren ever decides to retire from politics, she should get a TV show where the protagonists of the most outrageous news stories are asked questions that we all know the answers to already, but still make them squirm like Trump on Letterman. It could be a form of penance for the guests, like what "Dancing With the Stars" is for Ryan Lochte.

So for the sake of old-fashioned deadline-meeting fun, let's go through the rest of this week's hot links and imagine how they'd be handled on this imaginary show. We could call it "Warren's Elizabethan Drama" -- a variation of which, come to think of it, is a good name for the Trade of the Week.

"Thanks for being here, guy who makes vegan mayonnaise without any eggs. You really think it's a valid business practice to send workers out to buy loads and loads of your product and brag about being the No. 1 seller of mayo at Whole Foods?"

"You're next, Transocean executives. You really think it's a brilliant idea to simply turn off those drillships in the Caribbean until oil prices recover, even though this risky move hasn't been done before?" 

"Hey Marissa Meyer, so data on half a billion Yahoo! accounts was hacked two years ago and you didn't confirm it until the Verizon deal was nearing the finish line?"

"Mark Zuckerberg, just because everybody on Facebook exaggerates how happy their home lives are, how much wine they drink, how adorable each other's kids are, and how many marathons they plan to run, do you really think it's OK to exaggerate about how much time people spend watching videos on your site?"

"And finally, thanks for coming on the show, Brad Pitt. Which piece of gossip really did cause Angelina to dump you: that you're a child abuser, a pothead, a cheater, or all of the above? Oh, I see you've hired Charlie Sheen's lawyer. I guess that answers the question."
 
Anyway, that's all the hot links for now. Enjoy the weekend, but stay away from those grandkids because I just remembered a third example from the not-too-distant past: Hillary Clinton got seriously hurt playing with her nietos.

Good name for a band.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Michael P. Regan in New York at mregan12@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Beth Williams at bewilliams@bloomberg.net



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써니 2016-09-26 (월) 08:13
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:32
#24

Mary Erdoes
CEO, J.P. Morgan Asset Managment

Erdoes’s track record of growth at the bank’s $2.3 trillion asset-management unit has fueled speculation that she could be a successor to Jamie Dimon. She serves on the bank’s 10-person operating committee but has kept a low profile until recently. She took a bigger role this year in an initiative to promote corporate governance best practices. And like BlackRock’s Larry Fink, she’s been speaking out about how corporate short-termism goes against the interest of individual investors, including her clients, who are trying to build a nest egg for retirement.
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:33
#25

MASAYOSHI SON
Founder and CEO, SoftBank

Born in Japan to Korean immigrants, Son has said his humble origins helped fuel his ambitions. Today he presides over a large collection of telecommunications assets and web-based businesses and has a personal net worth of $12 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Although he once said he’d retire at age 60, Son shows no intention of handing over the reins as that date fast approaches. In July, SoftBank placed a big bet on the future of the internet of things with its $32 billion takeover of ARM Holdings, a chip designer in the U.K. Analysts weren’t happy about the hefty premium, but Son, who’s made some visionary investments in the past, may prove them wrong. 
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:34
#26

Charlie Scharf
CEO, Visa

Online payment services such as PayPal and its younger, hipper brother, Venmo, were once viewed as a threat to older financial companies. But now, Visa and PayPal have agreed to make nice over fees and data-sharing. The day after their deal was announced in July, Visa shares climbed and PayPal’s slid, a sign that Scharf may have gotten the better deal in the high-stakes negotiations, clamping down on practices by PayPal that could have cut the card network out of some transactions. 
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:35
#27


Paul Taubman
Founder and CEO, PJT Partners

Taubman’s compensation totaled $164 million in 2015, according to the Bloomberg Pay Index, making him the financial industry’s highest-paid executive. To be fair, Taubman, who founded his own boutique investment bank in 2013 after years as a rainmaker at Morgan Stanley, is being compensated more like a startup entrepreneur than a bank CEO. The big payout is related to last year’s spinoff of PJT Partners from Blackstone Group and is almost all in equity. 
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:35
#28

MARK CARNEY
Governor, Bank of England

With the Brexit vote, the Canadian economist who leads Britain’s central bank suddenly had a crisis to test his mettle. So far he’s cut rates and resumed the bank’s bond buying. Carney has had to defend his actions before Parliament, amid criticism from some pro-Brexit Conservative politicians who say he’s overreacting. “We’re very much not out of ammunition,” he told lawmakers in London this month, adding, “nor are we trigger-happy.”
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:36
#29

Joseph Stiglitz
Professor, Columbia

The Nobel prize-winning economist is a source of inspiration for young people who were part of the Occupy Wall Street effort five years ago and were with Bernie Sanders this year. But Stiglitz’s ideas are also winning over more mainstream figures. Lines from a manifesto that he wrote for the Roosevelt Institute, a small think tank in New York, have worked their way into Hillary Clinton’s stump speeches. The opening lines of the report, titled Rewriting the Rules of the American Economy, read: “Inequality is not inevitable. It is a choice we make with the rules we create to structure our economy.” 
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써니 2016-09-25 (일) 04:37
#30

Vladimir Putin
President, Russia

Sure, he’s isolated, and the Russian economy has pretty much become a no-go for U.S. and European investors in the wake of his annexing Crimea and stirring violent conflict in eastern Ukraine. But Putin shows little concern about the effects sanctions and low global energy prices are having. In a Bloomberg interview, he cited significant new investment in Russia’s oil and gas industry and the adequacy of his financial resources. “We absolutely have enough gold and foreign currency reserves,” he said. And so the world waits to see what Russia’s president will do next, with a bit of dread about the economic and financial turmoil he can cause—in oil markets, in the border states of eastern Europe, in the Middle East, and maybe even in the U.S. presidential election.
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2803  올해 노벨 생리의학상 +1 써니 10-04 1147
2802  뻔뻔한 트럼프 +2 써니 10-03 778
2801  부검 +5 써니 10-02 589
2800  [전문]박근혜 대통령 제68주년 국군의날 기념사 +2 써니 10-02 739
2799  서니 선생님 +1 wind 10-01 525
2798  미국인 유승준 +2 써니 09-30 883
2797  미친 윤병세 외교부 장관 +2 써니 09-29 614
2796  힐러리와 도날드 +2 써니 09-28 750
2795  41-50 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년) +11 써니 09-25 1994
2794  31-40 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년) +11 써니 09-25 1069
2793  21-30 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년) +15 써니 09-25 2728
2792  11-20 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년) +16 써니 09-25 1631
2791  01-10 : 블룸버그의 영향럭 있는 50인 (2016년) +12 써니 09-25 1578
2790  영조의 인생 +2 windkim 09-24 673
2789  김삿갓의 시 한 수 써니 09-23 785
2788  자기 목숨은 자기가 지켜야 한다. +2 써니 09-23 804
2787  경북 경주 지진 그리고 함북 길주 지진 써니 09-20 926
2786  한국의 군인에 대한 예우 수준 그리고..... +2 써니 09-19 752
2785  인터넷 포스팅에 관한 프라이버시 문제 +2 써니 09-19 684
2784  이태백 선생 영결식 +1 wind 09-16 800
2783  사라지는 것은 없다 -이태백 선생을 생각하며- +1 windkim 09-16 885
2782  이태백 선생의 영전에 드립니다. +4 wind 09-12 784
2781  Dr. Daniel Park 장례 장소: 구글 지도 및 사진입니다. +3 써니 09-12 847
2780  태백 선생의 장례일정 +2 wind 09-12 727
2779  친구이며 스승인 Daniel Park 박사를 보내며.. +2 써니 09-10 1161
2778  박 서방의 인사 글(고(故) 박경용 선생의 영전에..) +3 yu nam pak 09-09 972
2777  부고 +8 wind 09-09 1239
2776  산중거사 짝짝이 짝짓기 완화 주목 +5 이태백 09-08 752
2775  시원한 산하 전경. 관리자님께 부탁^*^ +4 이태백 09-07 778
2774  나라가 부패무능하여 망해 읊은 시. 이색, 홍춘경, 정약용, 두보, 이백 +4 이태백 09-07 993
2773  진선미는 움직인다. 이사 우파니사드(Isa Upanisad) +2 이태백 09-07 780
2772  테레사 수녀에게 교황청이 상 줄 자격이 있나? 그녀의 비탄의 의미 +1 이태백 09-07 716
2771  캐슈넛. 배보다 배꼽이 가치. 연두색 피스타시오 +1 이태백 09-06 837
2770  야동 강적농무명(羌笛隴畝鳴). 서민의 낙(樂) +1 이태백 09-06 1475
2769  미불유초(靡不有初)선극유종(鮮克有終). 시경ㆍ대아ㆍ탕지십. 모자미사(眸子靡徙) +1 이태백 09-05 834
2768  한국일보 박록 주필에게 댓글. F. 루즈벨트, 린든 존슨이 압승한 이유는. +1 이태백 09-05 810
2767  벌거 벗은 소비자에게 고양이 발걸음 +1 이태백 09-05 761
2766  그러나, 그러나라고만 말하지 말게But me no buts). 국방예산:고조진양궁장 +2 이태백 09-05 853
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